Thiopropazate

Chemical compound
  • N05AB05 (WHO)
Identifiers
  • 2-[4-[3-(2-chlorophenothiazin-10-yl)propyl]piperazin-1-yl]ethyl acetate
CAS Number
  • 84-06-0 checkY
PubChem CID
  • 6762
ChemSpider
  • 6504 checkY
UNII
  • 0JFY081Q2X
KEGG
  • D09216 checkY
ChEBI
  • CHEBI:59119 checkY
ChEMBL
  • ChEMBL1697851
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
  • DTXSID6023654 Edit this at Wikidata
ECHA InfoCard100.001.376 Edit this at WikidataChemical and physical dataFormulaC23H28ClN3O2SMolar mass446.01 g·mol−13D model (JSmol)
  • Interactive image
  • CC(=O)OCCN1CCN(CC1)CCCN2C3=CC=CC=C3SC4=C2C=C(C=C4)Cl
InChI
  • InChI=1S/C23H28ClN3O2S/c1-18(28)29-16-15-26-13-11-25(12-14-26)9-4-10-27-20-5-2-3-6-22(20)30-23-8-7-19(24)17-21(23)27/h2-3,5-8,17H,4,9-16H2,1H3 checkY
  • Key:AIUHRQHVWSUTGJ-UHFFFAOYSA-N checkY
  (verify)

Thiopropazate (Artalan, Dartal, Dartalan, Dartan) is a typical antipsychotic of the phenothiazine class.[1] It is a prodrug to perphenazine.

Thiopropazate is manufactured by Searle (US, UK) & Boehringer Mannheim (Germany)[2] Thiopropazate is sold by Chembase, AAA Chemistry, ZINC, AKos Consulting & Solutions, Boc Sciences, ChemFrog, and ChemMol[3]

Synthesis

Thieme Patent:[4]

The alkylation of 2-chloro-10-(3-chloropropyl)phenothiazine [2765-59-5] (1) with Piperazine (2) gives N-Desmethylprochlorperazine [40323-85-1] (3). Further alkylation with 2-Bromoethyl acetate [927-68-4] (4) gives Thiopropazate (5).

See also

References

  1. ^ Buckingham J (1996). Dictionary of organic compounds. London: Chapman & Hall. p. 5148. ISBN 0-412-54090-8.
  2. ^ Pharmaceutical Manufacturing Encyclopedia p. 3209
  3. ^ "Thiopropazate". PubChem. United States Library of Medicine.
  4. ^ John W Cusic, U.S. patent 2,766,235 (1956 to Searle & Co).
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